Viruses took a holiday last month, or more accurately, malicious code writers did.

Only two of August's 10 most frequently occurring viruses were new, said Sophos, a Lynnfield, Mass., corporate security software maker that publishes a monthly
list based help desk call data.

"The chart is full of old stalwarts such as Klez-H, Badtrans-B, Sircam and Nimda," said Chris Wraight, a consultant at the Lynnfield, Mass.-based Sophos. "Klez-H
and its nasty bedfellow ElKern-C, have accounted for almost a quarter of inquiries to Sophos's support center."

Users duped by variants of old viruses have not updated their anti-virus software, Wraight concluded. Nor have they heeded media and experts warnings about opening attachements from
unknown senders.

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In addition to viruses, Internet hoaxes continue to sow confusion among users. The multi-lingual JDBGMGR hoax, which claimed to be an extremely dangerous virus
has perplexed computer users since Ma.

"Simple to implement anti-hoax policies can help limit this confusion and will prevent hoaxes from needlessly clogging up email
servers and wasting valuable bandwidth," Wraight said.

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